8.3 out of 10 based on 20 ratings
|
||||
8.3 out of 10 based on 20 ratings By Jo Nova China is the leader in EV car production but it’s not quite the success you might think it is. The CCP was apparently determined to claim that they are making more EV’s than Tesla. But in order to get the EV subsidies, companies are producing vast numbers of cars no one wants to buy. It seems these cars are registered, falsely listed as “sold” and driven 30 miles to a graveyard to presumably rot, or spontaneously combust, whichever comes first. After thirteen years of one particular subsidy, supposedly only worth 3-6% of the best selling car, the government has paid out nearly $15 billion, which seems like it would buy quite a few fields of Neta V EVs. “China is the land of shortcuts and facades” Winston Sterzel has an insiders view on China, and claims there are also fly-by-night investment schemes which appear, inflate and disappear, in get-rich-quick projects purely designed to scam investors out of their money. In 2018 bicycle sharing schemes led to mountains of rotting bikes, and so it is again — this time with glass, heavy metals and rare earths. Who knows what the real price of an […] 10 out of 10 based on 9 ratings By Jo Nova Once again, batteries just aren’t living up to hopes and dreams. Only a year ago Rolls Royce were excited about the nine-seater P-Volt electric plane — forecasting that it would be carrying customers on ninety mile hops in 2025 and 250 miles by 2030. Alas, it must have been a sobering year. The developers of the P-Volt have pulled the pin indefinitely and decided to wait until battery capacity and weight improvements make it realistic. The P-Volt made by Tecnam Pioneering electric plane shelved as batteries only last a few hundred flights Howard Mustoe, The Telegraph A pioneering electric plane developer has shelved development of its new craft after discovering that its batteries will only last a few hundred flights before they need to be replaced. Tecnam said its main challenge was the energy density of the batteries available today, which are relatively too heavy for the amount of power they can store. The speed at which the batteries would lose charge would erode the nine-passenger craft’s value, ruining its commercial prospects, it added. “Not commercially viable” could be name for most Green engineering. What do we […] 7.8 out of 10 based on 15 ratings By Jo Nova Corporate leaders are not bragging about their environmental wins or diversity hires with the same fervour they had a year ago. Some of this is due to pressure from the 23 US state Governors who are asking CEO’s sharp and pointy questions about anti-trust behaviour and fiduciary duty and campaigning on anti-Woke platforms. And some of this is due to the backlash against disastrous Bud-Light and Target campaigns. Companies Quiet Diversity and Sustainability Talk Amid Culture War Boycotts Mark Maurer, Wall Street Journal Companies’ mentions of green and social initiatives during earnings calls have fallen off sharply in recent quarters, reversing a more boastful approach taken over the past few years amid intensifying pressure from some investors and conservative activists. Finance chiefs and other executives have significantly quieted down in public settings about their environmental and employee diversity efforts … Charting the rise and fall of public “Woke” declarations in the corporate world. Peak ESG may be behind us… WSJ The backlash is coming from several angles — investors, conservative groups, political leaders. It’s a good sign democracy and free markets are not dead yet. But these companies are probably pursuing […] 9.2 out of 10 based on 18 ratings By Jo Nova Ten years of lies, deception, and dangerous experiments Imagine if our adversaries were splicing together mutant viruses and testing them on humanized mice for years in order to make them more pathogenic, and our top researchers were helping them, our government was funding them, and we had years of warnings that the experiments were dangerous. The Sunday Times says “bioweapon” very quietly, but it’s in print in a long feature article with plenty of ugly details. The headline is very sedate given the gravity. The world would have reacted very differently in January 2020… An Act of War or an accident of war? What really went on inside the Wuhan lab weeks before Covid erupted Johnathon Calvert and George Abuthnott, The Sunday Times Fresh evidence drawn from confidential files reveals Chinese scientists spliced together deadly pathogens shortly before the pandemic, the Sunday Times Insight team report. For starters — here’s a map of the places where people were reporting on social media that they had covid in January 2020. While everyone was talking about sea-food markets, the big clue was there all the time. … These hot spots were […] 8.7 out of 10 based on 15 ratings By Jo Nova Electric cars are not enough, they want no cars (for you) Will taking a billion cars off the road change the climate or just make parking easier for WEF billionaires? The conference-and-ski club for the uber rich has issued another white paper no one asked for. In it, the World Economic Forum that no one elected, says the world should redesign cities and reduce the number of cars to 500 million by 2050. Given that there are 1.5 billion cars around today and we’re headed for 2 billion cars by then, this means thwarting the desires of 1.5 billion people. It won’t be rich people who miss out. It’s not clear why anyone should anyone care about the pronouncements of the Ski Club for the Stars of Money — but their strange catch-phrases have a spooky way of being parroted by our elected politician-minions. The galaxy of money that orbits the Planet WEF presumably waves their $100 Trillion dollar weight around and tells politicians “nice career you have there”. Who could argue with that? The WEF world always looks disturbingly like a preschool cartoon. WEF, World Economic Forum, The WEF White paper is titled: “The […] 9.2 out of 10 based on 13 ratings By Jo Nova Last days for the industrial giant of Germany? Thanks to NetZeroWatch BASF in 1887. They’re cutting jobs in Germany now, closing ammonia and plastics factories but growing in Ohio. The Green dream is unravelling in the fourth largest economy in the world. The Vice Chancellor is bluntly saying that Germany industry may have to shut down in 18 months if the current gas flow deal from Russia through Ukraine isn’t extended and he doesn’t seem to believe it could be. Meanwhile 13,000 people protested in Bavaria against the “heating ideology” — whereby evil gas is theoretically going to be forcibly replaced with wildly expensive heat pumps powered by erratic green electrons. The people just don’t want them: last year Germans installed 600,000 gas systems and only 236,000 heat pumps. Politicians are starting to back away slowly from the plan to make all new heaters “65% renewable” by next year. It’s starting to look like the backdown on banning fossil fuel powered cars. The German economy is possibly in a recession already and Greens are finally getting the blame. It’s so bad that journalists worry that the “Far Right Surge” could endanger some businesses. The right […] By Jo Nova The Malhotra-Dowd-Wolf-Shipman event about the Corruption of Medicine in Perth was a smashing success. The crowd of nearly 2,500 was on fire, the speakers were excellent and you can still watch it (and help cover some of the costs) by buying tickets to watch it online. Four hours of some of the best and brightest of humanity.
Fact-of-the-day (for me) was that the Australian TGA (drug approval agency) gets 96% of its budget from the industry it supposedly is a watchdog for. Hello? So when the TGA inexplicably banned the safe ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine options they were, it seems, just doing what any bought-and-paid corporate crony agency would, even if people died. Apparently the government agencies are not just a rubber stamp for profitable drugs, they are the iron mallet to crush the competition too. Cartoon thanks to Panda at FirstFactCheck While Australia won the prize for the agency with the Biggest Conflict of Interest, there’s little material difference in the EU, the US or the UK (or Canada). The drug industry funds 89% of the EMA budget in Europe and 86% of […] 8.1 out of 10 based on 20 ratings 9.1 out of 10 based on 15 ratings By Jo Nova Some overpaid academics think the rich nations owe $192,000,000,000,000 to poorer nations because of the “carbon pollution” they emitted. Jo Nova says that fossil fuels built a civilization that invented cars, trains, planes, penicillin, the Haber-Bosch process, and clean water — making seven billion more lives possible. Fossil Fueled nations added free fertilizer to the atmosphere, increased crops and forests, greened the world and fed more people than ever. The uncosted benefits owed to the West far outweigh the imaginary losses, so call off the parasites and let’s consider it all a free gift from the West to the world. What are seven billion lives worth? The global population was resolutely stuck under 1 billion people for a hundred thousand years, then we discovered fossil fuels. | Source: OWID It’s just another jumped up claim, not to feed the poor, but to enrich the bureaucrat class: Rich Nations Owe $192 Trillion for Causing Climate Change, New Analysis Finds By Chelsea Harvey, E&E News on June 6, 2023, Scientific American High carbon countries owe at least $192 trillion to low-emitting nations in compensation for their greenhouse gas pollution. That’s the conclusion of […] 8 out of 10 based on 9 ratings On The Aussie Wire — Jo Nova explains how banks and insurance giants force their policies on nationsBy Jo Nova It’s great to see new media platforms blossoming Australia. I spoke to Topher Field at The Aussie Wire to explain how BlackRock, bankers and the Insurance giants use your insurance, pension and super funds against you and why the 23 states of the USA are pushing back and even winning some battles. UN NetZero cartel wants to make Insurance Firms into “Climate Police”. But the insurance fund cartel is unravelling. The Big Money Cabal waving the socially responsible flag is The Dark Bubble that drives the Global Crazy Train we all ride at the moment. Topher introduces me at 13 minutes and generously lets me talk… Hopefully we can reach a whole new group of people who might not read blogs. In this episode of the AussieWire Topher also discusses the Housing Affordability Crisis in Australia, the South Australian Penalties for disruptive protests, and questions about “hate speech” legislation with David Limbrick MP. Check out The Aussie Wire — other guests this week include Ed Dowd (Don’t miss him with Dr Malhotra in Perth this Saturday if you can!) 9.9 out of 10 based on 65 ratings […] 7.8 out of 10 based on 13 ratings Who wouldn’t want to wake up to these beautiful towers… By Jo Nova Just another community horror thanks to Green fantasies Australia’s Power Grid is full they say, and to collect all the sacred green electrons and save the world now means building thousands of kilometers of high voltage towers that will carve up farms and wilderness, damage property values, and ruin good farming land. For some reason, inner city activists think that’s a good idea. But out in the country farmers and rural people are angry. Western Victorian Farmer protesting against new High Voltage Transmission Towers Few people want giant wind turbines spoiling the view and their sleep, but if the turbines are built in lonely far-flung spots, then thousands of 70m high steel towers will have to cross the land anyhow to connect their useless electrons. In theory the Renewable Crash Test Dummy nation “needs” another 10,000km of new transmission lines and they’re supposed to be built before 2030. To get some idea of just how impossible this is, consider Humelink which is meant to be the interconnector to “Snowy 2.0” (the doomed pumped storage scheme). It is only 360km long and was supposed […] |
||||
Copyright © 2025 JoNova - All Rights Reserved |
Recent Comments